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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (
hypothermia
)
17,327
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fifty patients with drug-resistant, recurrent tachyarrhythmias causing
Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome
underwent surgery between 1990 and 1992. All recognized surgical methods for accessory pathway destruction were performed. Epicardial electric shock ablation was first used as a method of surgically destroying an accessory atrioventricular pathway in 1983. This technique avoids the need for cardioplegia and
hypothermia
during operation. The procedure is based on the application of a series of two to five electrical shocks (50-150 J) to the region of the atrioventricular groove where the accessory pathway has been previously located. Some 32 patients with a left free wall accessory pathway underwent this operation. Cardioplegia and
hypothermia
were not required in 22 patients with an accessory pathway located in the left lateral position. In the second group comprising ten patients with a left lateral accessory pathway, four were diagnosed as having a second pathway and four had concomitant heart pathology such as coronary artery disease -- one had an atrial septal defect and another had a ventricular septal defect. Accessory pathway ablation was carried out in these ten patients using epicardial electric shock under normothermic cardiopulmonary bypass. Concomitant heart pathology was corrected at the second stage of the operation under cardiopulmonary bypass with cardioplegia and
hypothermia
. Postoperative electrophysiological studies confirmed that the accessory pathway had been destroyed in all patients. The only side effects of epicardial electric shock application were transient ST elevation < 1 mm in four patients, transient atrioventricular bloc in two and moderate sinus tachycardia in three.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Epicardial electric shock ablation of the left lateral accessory pathway. 857 41
A 52-year-old man was admitted due to out-hospital cardiac arrest. Recurrent ventricular fibrillation (VF) occurred under therapeutic
hypothermia
thereafter. Previously inadverted full pre-excitation was documented exclusively and immediately prior to 4 out of the 5 VF relapses. Coronary vasospasm and early repolarization were also documented. An electrophysiological study demonstrated poor anterograde conduction over a left-sided accessory pathway. We theorize that maximum pre-excitation favored in-hospital VF by augmenting the repolarization vulnerability induced by therapeutic
hypothermia
, with coronary vasospasm accounting as the probable cause of out-hospital VF. A plausible VF mechanism in
WPW syndrome
unrelated to pre-excited atrial fibrillation is discussed.
...
PMID:Ventricular fibrillation in a patient with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome unrelated to pre-excited atrial fibrillation. 3114 Dec 44